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Escolástico Gonzalez Lopez 28.09.09

High-Speed Train and Airports Integration. The case of the first Spanish private airport: Aeropuerto Central Ciudad Real. Escolástico Gonzalez Lopez 28.09.09. A historic perspective of transport in Spain. 1900 – 1950 The railway becomes the main transport in medium and long distance.

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Escolástico Gonzalez Lopez 28.09.09

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  1. High-Speed Train and Airports Integration. The case of the first Spanish private airport: Aeropuerto Central Ciudad Real Escolástico Gonzalez Lopez 28.09.09

  2. A historic perspective of transport in Spain • 1900 – 1950 • The railway becomes the main transport in medium and long distance. • From 1940 to 2005 an only public operator manages the infrastructure network and the travelers operator • 1950 – 1980 • The car becomes the main character due to the improvement of technology and the creation of a wide roads network. • All the public policy focuses on road transport. Roads manage 90% of the passenger traffic and 80% of the cargo traffic • 1980 – 2000 • Aircraft gains market share within the peninsula • LCC’s start operating in the Spanish market in 1998, this fact boosts the air industry • 2000– 2010 • The railway emerges upon the arrival of the high-speed train • The railway becomes a competitor of aircraft

  3. Spanish railway system : Three types of track width Conventional network and width Aeropuerto CR • Nowadays, conventional railways are being transformed for the cargo transport. The railways correspond to those corridors that may be used for the cargo transport once high-speed train becomes operative. • The construction of new alternatives to the conventional network. • The enlargement of current network capacity. • The reinforcement of the connection between railway network and the main State seaports. • Ciudad Real Airport is building a cargo terminal that enables the connection to the conventional train network.

  4. Spanish railway system : Three types of track width High-Speed Network Aeropuerto CR • 30 Spanish cities will be connected through high-speed train network • 90% of the Spanish population will be living less than 50 kms away from a station • In 2012, Spain will be the first country in the world with a higher number of Kms of high- speed train network • All the provinces capital cities will be connected to the high-speed train network • High-speed network will connect both Iberian Peninsula countries, Spain and Portugal. Madrid –Lisboa • The European South East axis will connect Spain to France through high-speed train (2010) • Ciudad Real airport will be the first Spanish airport to be directly connected to the high-speed network

  5. Spanish railway system : Three types of track width Year 2005 • In 2005, a new Spanish railway network shows up as a consequence of the application of EU directives. • - There is a split between infrastructure and operator. • - Renfe stops being a monopoly and cargo transport is liberalised. New Spanish railway network • The application of new EU directives in 2010/11 will imply the liberalization of railway pax transport • Ciudad Real airport intends to become one of the new railway operators

  6. Spanish Airport System: Public Network and Private Airports • Publicairportsnetwork. 35 Airports • Privateairports. 9 Licenses • 1 operative: Ciudad Real airport • 3 underconstruction • 2 General interestdeclarationshavebeenawarded • 3 in project • All of them, excluding Ciudad Real Airport, are beingpromotedby regional administrations • Air Traffic Control (AENA) has a monopolynature. Tariffs: airlineorairport • State Security services. Security feetobepaidbythepax. • Statecustomsservices. Veterinary Aeropuerto CR • During 2010, the airports de-centralization process starts and Regional administrations will participate. The first de-centralised airports will be Madrid, Barcelona and Palma. • The Spanish public airport network managed in 2008 203 million pax. • Thr first 3 Spanish airports, Madrid, Barcelona and Palma amount 50 % of the air traffic. • The air and airport industries are bound to Spanish tourism, which is the State’s first national income source. • Strong presence of LCC’s.

  7. Spain’s physical characteristics: Population and territory layout • During the last 25 years, a road and railway radial communications system has been maintained, connecting the center to the coasts of Spain. • The high capacity road network, highways and toll highways, keeps on expanding (from 13.000 kms to 18.000 kms in 2020) • This roads network has encouraged the competitiveness of bus and private car. • However, the radial distances in the peninsula (400 – 600 kms from Madrid to all the periferic cities) make the AVE become the main transport means over the next 25 years. • The distances in the Iberian Peninsula thorugh high-speed train network will be no more than 2.5 hours from the center of Spain to the periferic areas. • The Spanish State bet on the high-speed train, including the construction of 10,000 kms of network, becomes a new way of understanding the territorial structure, more environmentally-friendly and more energy-efficient. • High-speed train is 100% feeded by electric power, there is no pollution in the cities. Since Spain is a leader in renewable power, the usage of it will reduce its impact on the AVE.

  8. AVE & Airports Integration: High-speed train and aircraft - competitors • Spanishairportsonlyhave a conventionaltrackrailwayconnectionfromtheairporttodowntown • High-speedrailwaytrackshavenotbeendesignedtobepresent at theairports. • Bothmodes, air and high-speedrailway are competing in thePeninsuladomesticrelations. • Madrid – Barcelona • Madrid – Málaga • Madrid - Sevilla Market Share Train + Airplane Point to Point

  9. Service networks and passenger transport intermodality • Currently, there aren’t intermodality development in Spain • There are any projects for connect the airplane with the train, example: Málaga and Barcelona • Others cities haven’t the connection. Only there are connections air-land Aeropuerto CR

  10. The case of the first Spanish private airport: Aeropuerto Central Ciudad Real

  11. European Policy: White Book 2010 The combination on the same spot of an airport, a high-speed train station (AVE), high-capacity roads, and a dry port, makes the project become a powerful concentration of diverse transportation platforms enabling it to locate itself in a strategic position as far as the peninsula and southern Europe transits are concerned. • Intermodal development through different means of transportation, especially between air mode and railway. • Involvement of mobility systems and more sustainable means of transport • Complimentary use of the High-speed train and Airport

  12. The Intermodality within the city transport Logistic Area Logistic Center Industry Area Internacional Airport Comercial Aviation General Aviation Cargo and Passengers Comercial Activities and management services Fully equipped customs offices (PIF) and Railway Activities AVE Station Intermodal Station Cargo

  13. The first airport in Spain with AVE connection • Adif and the Fomento Ministry approve the AVE train station project on February 16, 2009. This will enable Central Airport to be less than an hour away from Madrid. • First airport in Spain with AVE connection and with a potential of 20 million passengers. • Nowadays, 56 daily frequencies (Avant, AVE and Altaria) are under operation in the high-speed South corridor in connection to Madrid. • Less than 2 minutes access to any type of transportation mode. The airport and its logistics platform are configured as an XXI-century airport city, offering all kind of services to customers and users. • Aeropuerto Central Ciudad Real, through its territorial layout, is able to reduce to the minimum size the social and economic costs of intermodality (less financial cost, less environmental cost) and it may ease permeability conditions among transportation modes.

  14. High-speed connection Configured as an excellent integration point of road, air and railway (AVE + conventional) transport for passengers and cargo AVE airport connection catchment area. The airport is 55 minutes away from Madrid and Cordoba, 90 minutes away from Seville and 2 hours away from Zaragoza

  15. A. 2. Station AVE. Features • The passenger terminal is connected to the AVE train station by a walkway 200 meters • Elapsed time in the coupling (2 minutes) and uncoupling (1 minute) is faster than time needed for the passengers to get on or get off the train

  16. A. 2. Station AVE. Features • Direct Connection with two railway networks: international and conventional. • Connection with speed-high (AVE): Madrid, Ciudad Real, Puertollano, Cordoba, Sevilla, Málaga, Cádiz, Huelva. • Connection with conventional: Extremadura and any regional localities of Castilla-La Mancha (Almagro, Daimiel, Manzanares, Alcázar de San Juan, Criptana, Albacete. etc.)

  17. A. 3. Traffic. South Corridor High-speed train pax evolution: South Corridor • The South Corridor high-speed train pax traffic (Madrid Ciudad Real – Puertollano – Sevilla), according to estimations done by SPIM, has shown a rising trend in the period 2000 – 2006. • In 2000 this traffic reached 4,54 million pax whereas in 2006 the total traffic reached5,93 million pax, this means a variation rate of 4,54%. • The network map and high-speed train traffic data are shown in the attached graphs. Aeropuerto CR Elaboración: SPIM Elaboración: SPIM

  18. A. 4. Demand • Another demand niche for Ciudad Real airport is the Reino de Don Quijote Resort, integrated by touristic, leisure and residential complexes, and where leisure, trading and golf offers are combined. • The potential demand attraction this complex may arise sets an objective of 1,2 million pax travelling from Madrid and Ciudad Real Airport in 2011. • The summary of potential demand shows that in 2010 there will be 1,6 million pax/year (1,3 million for the airport and 325.000 new users) whereas from 2011 on, the demand will reach 2,8 million pax due to the new demand generated by the resort. Summary of Potential Demand

  19. A. 4. Demand MADRID PUERTOLLANO CIUDAD REAL AEROPUERTO CIUDAD REAL 1,3 MM 1,3 MM Potential Demand Attraction • Potentially attracted streams: • Nowadays, the Puertollano – Madrid-Atocha shuttle transports approximately 1,3 million pax: each train may transport 230 pax, with a daily frequency of 16 trains. The proposal of a stop at Ciudad Real Airport, with a double-composition train, will attract a maximum amount of 1,3 million pax, generated by Ciudad Real Airport. • On the other hand, this traffic may provoke an additional 25% induced demand, so the traffic would increase up to 1,6 million pax.

  20. B. Intermodal Terminal Connection intermodal with the seaports • The Dry Port is connection with the principal ports of Spain • The intermodal station is in the Peninsular Center, between Mediterranean sea and Atlantic Ocean

  21. B. 1.Intermodal Terminal. Connectionbyroad • Direct connection to A-41 & A-43 highways. Upcoming connection to AP-41 highway. • Next to A-4 Andalucía highway and at 10 km of IV Centenary Highway

  22. B. 1. Intermodal Terminal. Central Ciudad Real Airport. Features • The Intermodal terminal extends over a total surface of 17.6 hectares at the airport Service Area, where 35 hectares will be dedicated to logistics activities. • A beam consisting of 2 reception and delivery railway tracks, electrified, with a 900-metre length and a 3‰ longitudinal slope. • The intermodal terminal includes a paved containers area (1.050 x 55 meters) for the railway activity

  23. B. 2. Intermodal Terminal. Demanda y tráfico. According to the provided information, the Ciudad Real intermodal terminal containers potential attraction traffic would reach 24.500 TEU’s along the first year of operation, this amount is expected to steadily increase up to 77.000 TEU’s during the tenth year operation. From then on the containers traffic will increase on a 5 % basis/year, without running out of the terminal capacity, but leaving a 15 % margin between the traffic received and its maximum capacity. • In addition to these traffic, it is estimated that a vehicle railway transportation traffic will reach 2 trains/week in the first year of the terminal operation, reaching 10 trains/week in the tenth year, to finally remain constant from then on. • Finally, another income is estimated due to road TEU’s of 35.000 TEU’s every year.

  24. B. Intermodal Terminal • The Intermodal Terminal of Central Ciudad Real Airport, second Dry Port of Spain, is a business itself • The Intermodal Terminal Central Ciudad Real Airport is a value added for the logistic center • Intermodal Terminal opens news business for the airport. Example: Car Campaign for 15.000 cars).

  25. High-speed connection • Thehighestconcentration of intermodal infrastructure in theIberianPeninsula • INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT • - Pax terminal • - Air Cargo Terminal • HIGH-SPEED TRAIN STATION (AVE) • CONVENTIONAL RAILWAY PAX STATION • ROAD CONNECTIONS – HIGHWAYS • CARGO INTERMODAL STATION/ DRY PORT • LOGISTICS PLATFORM

  26. C. The Logistic Center major of European • Intermodal space within 1km walking distance • The Logistic Area extends over 600,000 sqm • 14 different areas of activity dedicated to transport and logistics

  27. Thank you for your attention Escolástico González López : egonzalez@aeropuertocr.com; www.aeropuertocentralcr.com Tfno: + 34 926 27 41 22 / + 34 629 05 97 60 D. General Aeropuerto Central Ciudad Real 2006/2009 Director Comercial Transportes Mercancías Renfe 2002/2006 J. Nacional de Ventas Viajeros Renfe G.L 1996/2002 Gerente AVE Ciudad Real – Puertollano 1988/1996

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